Monument

King's Cross war memorial - 3. post-renovations

Erection date: 27/10/2013

Inscription

{On the left side of the rusty information panel:}
The war memorial at King’s Cross was first erected in 1920 by the Great Northern Railway, listing those employees who gave their lives in the Great War.  After the Second World War, it was also dedicated to the employees of the London and North Eastern Railway who fell in that conflict.

Following relocation in 1973, only the eleven original name panels remained.  These marble tablets were restored and reinstated here in 2013, supported in new steel columns.

The spacing and heights of the columns and their plinths echo John Singer Sargent’s 1919 painting Gassed, an outline of which is shown above.  This monumental canvas, part of the Imperial War Museum collection, depicts eleven soldiers guiding each other across a battlefield following a gas attack.

This memorial, standing at the end of the railway worked by the men named here, honours all who fought and fell in the two wars.

{On the right side of the rusty information panel:}
To the immortal memory of the men of the Great Northern Railway who gave their lives in the Great War. 

1914-18
1939-45
{The two date ranges share their “19”.}
To the immortal memory of the men of the London and North Eastern Railway who gave their lives in the Second World War

The original memorial erected in 1920 by the Great Northern Railway Company thirty yards west of here was relocated in 1973 by the British Railways Board.  This new memorial incorporating the original name panels was erected here by Network Rail.

{The panels are the very ones that we previously transcribed so click here to see the list of names.}

Site: King's Cross war memorial - 3. post-renovations (1 memorial)

NW1, Euston Road, King's Cross Station

We are not convinced that basing the design of this memorial on the painting Gassed is totally successful.  Compare this memorial with the two previous manifestations of these name panels: Original and Pre-renovations.  The new location is better than the other two but we think the traditional memorial designs work better than the new one, in which the panels appear flimsy and insubstantial, making the whole memorial less imposing than it should be.  That's our personal opinion, others may find the new design intriguing, even inspiring.

Press Release following the unveiling.

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This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
King's Cross war memorial - 3. post-renovations

Subjects commemorated i

World War 1

We'd always assumed that this war was known as the Great War until WW2 came a...

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World War 2

Sorry, we've done no research on WW2, it's just too big a subject. But do vis...

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men of Great Northern Railway who gave their lives in WW1

Forgive us, we've used this page as somewhere to hold the picture of the memo...

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This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
King's Cross war memorial - 3. post-renovations

Created by i

Network Rail

Government-created owner and operator of most of the rail infrastructure in G...

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John Singer Sargent

Born Florence, Italy. Prolific American painter, specializing in portraits. A...

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